table of contents
std::experimental::ranges::equal(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::experimental::ranges::equal(3) |
NAME¶
std::experimental::ranges::equal - std::experimental::ranges::equal
Synopsis¶
Defined in header <experimental/ranges/algorithm>
template< InputIterator I1, Sentinel<I1> S1, InputIterator I2,
Sentinel<I2> S2,
class Pred = ranges::equal_to<>,
class Proj1 = ranges::identity, class Proj2 = ranges::identity >
(1) (ranges TS)
requires IndirectlyComparable<I1, I2, Pred, Proj1, Proj2>
bool equal(I1 first1, S1 last1, I2 first2, S2 last2, Pred pred =
Pred{},
Proj1 proj1 = Proj1{}, Proj2 proj2 = Proj2{});
template< InputRange R1, InputRange R2, class Pred =
ranges::equal_to<>,
class Proj1 = ranges::identity, class Proj2 = ranges::identity >
requires IndirectlyComparable<ranges::iterator_t<R1>, (2)
(ranges TS)
ranges::iterator_t<R2>,
Pred, Proj1, Proj2>
bool equal(R1&& r1, R2&& r2, Pred pred = Pred{},
Proj1 proj1 = Proj1{}, Proj2 proj2 = Proj2{});
template< InputIterator I1, Sentinel<I1> S1, class I2,
class Pred = ranges::equal_to<>,
class Proj1 = ranges::identity, class Proj2 = ranges::identity > (ranges
TS)
requires InputIterator<std::decay_t<I2>> &&
!Range<I2> && (3) (deprecated)
IndirectlyComparable<I1, std::decay_t<I2>, Pred, Proj1, Proj2>
bool equal(I1 first1, S1 last1, I2&& first2_, Pred pred = Pred{},
Proj1 proj1 = Proj1{}, Proj2 proj2 = Proj2{});
template< InputRange R1, class I2, class Pred =
ranges::equal_to<>,
class Proj1 = ranges::identity, class Proj2 = ranges::identity >
requires InputIterator<std::decay_t<I2>> &&
!Range<I2> && (ranges TS)
IndirectlyComparable<ranges::iterator_t<R1>, std::decay_t<I2>,
(4) (deprecated)
Pred, Proj1, Proj2>
bool equal(R1&& r1, I2&& first2_, Pred pred = Pred{},
Proj1 proj1 = Proj1{}, Proj2 proj2 = Proj2{});
1) Returns true if the range [first1, last1) is equal to the range [first2,
last2),
and false otherwise.
2) Same as (1), but uses r1 as the first source range and r2 as the
second source
range, as if using ranges::begin(r1) as first1, ranges::end(r1) as last1,
ranges::begin(r2) as first2, and ranges::end(r2) as last2.
3) Same as (1), except that the second range is considered to end when
either the
first range is exhausted or the first mismatch is detected. Equivalent to
return
last1 == ranges::mismatch(first1, last1, std::forward<I2>(first2_),
comp, proj1,
proj2).in1();
4) Same as (3), but uses r1 as the first source range, as if using
ranges::begin(r1)
as first1 and ranges::end(r1) as last1.
Two ranges are considered equal if they have the same number of elements and,
for
every iterator i in the range [first1,last1), ranges::invoke(pred,
ranges::invoke(proj1, *i), ranges::invoke(proj2, *(first2 + (i - first1))))
is true.
Notwithstanding the declarations depicted above, the actual number and order
of
template parameters for algorithm declarations is unspecified. Thus, if
explicit
template arguments are used when calling an algorithm, the program is
probably
non-portable.
Parameters¶
first1, last1 - the first range of the elements
r1 - the first range of the elements
first2, last2 - the second range of the elements
r2 - the second range of the elements
first2_ - the beginning of the second range of the elements
pred - predicate to apply to the projected elements
proj1 - projection to apply to the elements in the first range
proj2 - projection to apply to the elements in the second range
Return value¶
true if the two ranges are equal, otherwise returns false.
Notes¶
ranges::equal should not be used to compare the ranges formed by
the iterators from
std::unordered_set, std::unordered_multiset, std::unordered_map, or
std::unordered_multimap because the order in which the elements are stored in
those
containers may be different even if the two containers store the same
elements.
When comparing entire containers for equality, operator== for the
corresponding
container are usually preferred.
Complexity¶
1-2) If SizedSentinel<S1, I1> &&
SizedSentinel<S2, I2> is satisfied and last1 -
first1 != last2 - first2, no applications of the predicate and projections.
Otherwise, at most min(last1 - first1, last2 - first2) applications of the
predicate
and each projection.
3-4) At most last1 - first1 applications of the predicate and each
projection.
Possible implementation¶
namespace detail
{
template< InputIterator I1, SizedSentinel<I1> S1,
InputIterator I2, SizedSentinel<I1> S2 >
bool check_size(I1& first1, S1& last1, I2& first2, S2& last2)
{
return last1 - first1 != last2 - first2;
}
template< InputIterator I1, Sentinel<I1> S1, InputIterator I2,
Sentinel<I1> S2 >
bool check_size(I1& first1, S1& last1, I2& first2, S2& last2)
{
return false;
}
}
template< InputIterator I1, Sentinel<I1> S1, InputIterator I2,
Sentinel<I2> S2,
class Pred = ranges::equal_to<>,
class Proj1 = ranges::identity, class Proj2 = ranges::identity >
requires IndirectlyComparable<I1, I2, Pred, Proj1, Proj2>
bool equal(I1 first1, S1 last1, I2 first2, S2 last2, Pred pred = Pred{},
Proj1 proj1 = Proj1{}, Proj2 proj2 = Proj2{})
{
if(detail::check_size(first1, last1, first2, last2)) return false;
for(; first1 != last1 && first2 != last2; (void) ++first1,
(void)++first2) {
if(!ranges::invoke(pred, ranges::invoke(proj1, *first1),
ranges::invoke(proj2, *first2))) {
return false;
}
}
return first1 == last1 && first2 == last2;
}
Example¶
This section is incomplete
Reason: no example
See also¶
equal determines if two sets of elements are the same
(function template)
find finds the first element satisfying specific criteria
find_if (function template)
find_if_not
returns true if one range is lexicographically less than
lexicographical_compare another
(function template)
mismatch finds the first position where two ranges differ
(function template)
search searches for a range of elements
(function template)
2022.07.31 | http://cppreference.com |